CALLING ALL ADELAIDE TEN PIN BOWLERS! 🎳
Ozsports Radio is on the lookout for Ten Pin Bowlers across Adelaide to jump on board and become part of the Ozsports Radio Ten Pin Bowling Team.

Ozsports Radio is on the lookout for Ten Pin Bowlers across Adelaide to jump on board and become part of the Ozsports Radio Ten Pin Bowling Team.


Ozsports Radio is on the lookout for two passionate South Australian golfers to become the voices of a brand‑new weekly golf podcast.
Read More Calling for Two South Australian Golfers to Host a Weekly Podcast
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Cricket’s T20 evolution is one of the clearest examples of a sport deliberately choosing entertainment-first – and largely succeeding – while still wrestling with what it means for tradition.
The case for entertainment
T20 has done what cricket desperately needed in the 2000s:
From a pure survival standpoint, T20 didn’t just modernise cricket – it future proofed it.
The cost to tradition
The fear isn’t that T20 exists -it’s that it becomes the default, slowly hollowing out Tests and even ODI’s.
Ironically, T20 has also:
Funded Test cricket, especially in smaller nations.
Created stars who later draw audiences to longer formats.
Lowered the entry barrier—once someone loves T20, some do graduate to appreciating Tests.
The issue isn’t entertainment vs tradition—it’s balance and governance.
T20 isn’t killing cricket. Poor scheduling, weak Test promotion, and uneven financial models are bigger threats.
If managed well:
T20 = the hook
ODIs = the bridge
Tests = the soul
Cricket doesn’t need to choose between fireworks and five-day epics. It just needs to stop pretending one can replace the other.
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Darren Andrews Ozsports Radio Journalist. 2nd February 2026
Few innovations in modern sport have sparked as much debate as the Video Assistant Referee. Introduced with the promise of eliminating “clear and obvious errors,” VAR was meant to usher football into a new era of fairness. Instead, it has become one of the game’s most polarizing talking points — celebrated by some, resented by many, and questioned by almost everyone.
Supporters of VAR argue that football is simply too fast, too high‑stakes, and too valuable to rely solely on the human eye. Key decisions — goals, penalties, red cards — can define seasons, careers, and club finances. VAR, in theory, provides:
For many, the idea of not using available technology feels outdated. Other sports — cricket, rugby, tennis — have embraced video review with success. Why should football be any different?
But football isn’t just a sport; it’s emotion, chaos, and rhythm. Critics argue VAR disrupts all three.
Fans in stadiums often stand frozen, unsure whether to celebrate or hold their breath. Goals are followed by awkward pauses, not pure joy.
Offside decisions decided by a toe, a shoulder, or a pixel have left many questioning whether the spirit of the law has been lost.
Despite the technology, humans still interpret the footage. Two referees can watch the same replay and reach different conclusions — proving VAR hasn’t removed controversy, only changed its shape.
Unlike rugby or cricket, football fans rarely hear the referee’s reasoning. Decisions feel distant, mysterious, and sometimes arbitrary.
The answer depends on who you ask.
Football’s global appeal has always been tied to its simplicity. VAR, for all its benefits, has complicated that simplicity.
Football authorities continue to tweak protocols — semi‑automated offside technology, quicker checks, clearer communication — but the tension remains. The sport is wrestling with a fundamental question:
Should football prioritise perfect accuracy, or preserve the human imperfections that make it so compelling?
Until that balance is found, VAR will remain the game’s most divisive teammate.
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